Revolution in the judiciary Mexican judge uses AI for draft judgments

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26.6.2024

Symbolic image: A pioneering judge from Mexico's Supreme Court is using AI to disseminate her draft judgments and explain their content.
Symbolic image: A pioneering judge from Mexico's Supreme Court is using AI to disseminate her draft judgments and explain their content.
Dall-E @blue News

Ana Margarita Ríos Farjat, a judge at the Mexican Supreme Court, is the first to use AI to disseminate her draft judgments and make them easier to understand.

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No time? blue News summarizes for you

  • Ana Margarita Ríos Farjat, a judge at the Mexican Supreme Court, is a pioneer in using AI to increase transparency and efficiency.
  • The Sor Juana platform enables users to interact with judgments and ask questions using file numbers.
  • Sor Juana explains judgments in an understandable way without processing personal data and improves transparency in the justice system.

Ana Margarita Ríos Farjat, a judge at the Mexican Supreme Court, was the first to introduce the use of AI to disseminate her draft judgments and make their content easier to understand.

The innovative judge uses the Sor Juana platform, which was developed by her team with the support of online resources such as Streamlit, Google and Pinecone. The artificial intelligence tool complements the court's existing technological innovations, such as links to documents and QR codes, which can be accessed from any smart device.

With the Sor Juana platform, users can interact directly with a judgment. Via a menu, they select a case by its case number and activate a chat where they can ask questions about the case, the outcome and the date of the review by the First Chamber of the Court. The model is experimental and explains the facts, sentence by sentence, without collecting or processing personal data.

According to the Mexican newspaper La Jornada, users only have to select the topic and can then ask questions such as: What is this case about? Sor Juana answers these questions in a practical and easy-to-understand way. The platform also makes it possible to ask questions such as: What conclusion does the draft judgment reach? Or: What precedents are used in this case?